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    Default Re: Sons of the Wolf and the Bear (Sweboz)

    Chapter IX – New Ties
    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    It was a strange and surreal thing to be holding court in the house of one’s enemy. The situation in Skandza still being rather volatile and unstable, Heruwulfaz had decided it best to remain in the country for a while, at least until he could be sure that the latest addition to the Confederacy would not violently disintegrate upon his departure. Perhaps to emphasize his triumph, or perhaps simply out of convenience, the king had set up his offices in the palace of the late Hlewagastiz, perching himself on the same throne from which the mad Skandzan had once orchestrated the downfall of his people.

    Even the pettiest of chiefs and kings had been watching as the armies of Sweboz and Skandza clashed, and for good reason; Hlewagastiz and his host had represented the last true challenge to Sweboz authority in the Northlands. Now that the Skandza were defeated, the assimilation of the remaining tribes was no longer a question of “if”, but rather “when”. To prevent his neighbors from doing anything desperate, Heruwulfaz found himself playing a tense diplomatic game, trying to assuage the worst fears of the remaining tribes whilst simultaneously prodding them towards membership in the Confederacy. So far it was working, but only just.

    “I have taken a census of these new lands, as you ordered,” the retainer announced with a flourish, “and return now to present them to you at your Lordship’s leisure.”

    Heruwulfaz crossed his arms expectantly, stifling a tired yawn at the prospect of another long day. As far as the duties of a king were concerned, listening to long lists of statistics ranked among the worst of them. “Present them, then – lest you should forget them first!”

    The other laughed politely at his king’s joke before continuing. “First, I have the account of the casualties from the battle with your enemy Hlewagastiz. My king, we have finally finished identifying all of the dead and fallen, and I am pleased to report that casualty rates were better than we initially expected. It would seem that our forces lost no more than one-hundred warriors, whereas almost none of the Skandzan host survived.”

    Heruwulfaz grunted his approval, trying to present the appearance of an impassive and commanding king. “See to it that all of the dead are buried honorably, in accordance with the traditions of their kinsmen,” he insisted. “Lord Alugobaz can instruct you on the proper rites for the Skandzans – the rest, I am sure, can be handled easily enough.”

    “Of course, it will be done my lord. As for the rest of my report…” the servant began clearing his throat noisily. “Your agents have traveled through the breadth of this land and taken careful accounting of everything – what little they could not see for themselves they have gleaned from the native inhabitants. To begin with, I have been told that the people of Skandza number a little more than one-thousand persons – women and children included.”

    “This land is populous,” Heruwulfaz remarked with genuine surprise. “I do not recall seeing so many villagers when I was on the march.”
    “The land of Skandza is incredibly vast,” the retainer explained, carefully defending his report. “Civilization is not very dense here, true, but across so great a distance the numbers add up quickly.”

    “Which brings me to my next report,” the man continued. “In riding throughout the countryside, your agents have achieved a rough understanding of this country’s borders. Let me begin by saying that, to the north, your dominion now stretches without end. The forests and crags of Skandza eventually give way a boundless expanse of snow and ice, which reaches all the way to the very ends of the earth.”

    Heruwulfaz sat up in his seat, honestly intrigued. “Am I to understand that my scouts have actually seen the ends of the earth!?”

    The servant shook his head apologetically, “I am afraid not, my lord. In time, as one travels far enough north, the obstacles arrayed against them become insurmountable; I am told that it is cold enough to sear a man’s skin to the bone, and that the ice becomes fickle and untrustworthy. Clearly, as the world of men begins to transition into the world of the Gods, the land becomes corrosive to mortals. One of your loyal servants actually died trying to press onward – he sank right into the water and froze to death.”

    “A bitter lesson,” the king mourned, “but well-learned nonetheless. What else do you have to tell me?”

    The retainer bowed and began to speak again. “In the west, your patrimony now extends across forests and mountains, all the way to the open ocean. You did not pass through this region during your campaign, but I can assure you that this part of the land is very much the same. Your scouts wished to emphasize, however, that the fishermen in these parts are particularly talented, and they have excellent knowledge of sailing and navigation.”

    Heruwulfaz reached idly for his cup. “What lies across this new ocean, if anything?”

    The other shrugged, “none of the villagers have ever crossed it before, my king.”

    “That will have to change,” the king mumbled, more for his own benefit than for anyone else. “I have already seen the south for myself,” he added quickly, growing bored once again. “Give me your report of the east so we may be done with this.”

    The retainer seemed to be flustered momentarily, but he recovered gracefully and carried on. “You should know first that it is impossible to go east in Skandza without also going north; the whole country is shaped like a wide horseshoe. The east, therefore, is cold and snowy as the north is, with little in the way of civilization. With enough travel, your lands soon transition into those of the Sami, who prefer to keep to themselves.” Having finished his report, the man took a step back and dropped to one knee.

    “My thanks for your assessment,” the king replied between gulps of beer, “you have done fine work, and will soon be rewarded. For now, you may go.”

    No sooner had the servant made his way from the hall then the door shot open again, smashing so fiercely against the wall that the whole room seemed to shudder and groan with the impact. Trapped between astonishment and irritation, Heruwulfaz pushed himself to his feet, a stern reprimand already waiting on the tip of his tongue.

    It was not some incompetent slave who emerged through the doorway, however, but rather a very irate-looking Erilaz, storming across the length of the chamber as fast as his cane would allow. Heruwulfaz couldn’t avoid the tiniest pang of pity as he watched his political rival struggle to simply cross a room. Neither age nor circumstance had been kind to the old man over the past year; he looked like a man on his deathbed, the flesh of his face sunken, withered, and sallow as a corpse. Even his long hair, a gift he had once taken great pride in, was now thin and brittle, more akin to a batch of twigs then anything else.

    Simultaneous with the decline in Erilaz’s health, his political power and reputation had taken a dive as well. Heruwulfaz’s triumphant victories in the field had made criticizing him akin to political suicide, and in this sense Erilaz had fallen upon his sword hard. His ring of powerful supporters and advocates had dwindled down to almost nothing, leaving only him and a small group of devout reactionaries to rally a hopeless defense against the rest of the Thing. Even if he had still been the puppet master of the Thing, it would have done him little good. Through his victories, Heruwulfaz had made himself powerful enough to all but obviate the Thing as a political force; in particular, his recent investment as Xorjonoz by his troops gave him uncontested authority over the army, and uncontested control over the army essentially gave him uncontested control over the whole nation. Still, it was not in Erilaz’s nature to back down, not even from a king.

    “Heruwulfaz!” the old man wheezed, infusing his reedy voice with as much malice and contempt as he could possibly muster.

    “You do not look so well, my old friend,” the king commented kindly. “Surely your healer has forbidden you from traveling like this?”

    Erilaz literally spat onto the floor, still hobbling awkwardly towards Heruwulfaz. “My healer is a moron and a windbag – vices which seem all too common lately, I might add.”

    Heruwulfaz patiently ignored the slight, motioning for his servants to bring a chair. “Since you have come so far, I suppose it would be remiss of me to waste your time with small talk. What can I do for you?”

    The venerable statesman took a few moments to settle himself, stretching out his limbs with a series of discomforting pops and cracks. Having finally made himself comfortable, he put aside his cane and cleared his throat. “Your lordship, I come before you with a single, simple request: you must disband the army.”

    The question was so blunt and so bold that Heruwulfaz could not help but laugh at it, nearly spitting out a mouthful of beer in the process. Just seconds later, the stony glare on Erilaz’s face had turned the king’s mirth into confusion. “Surely you can’t be serious?” he insisted, still chuckling a little to himself. “This is the strongest our host has been in living memory! Why would I send them home now?”

    Erilaz stubbornly crossed his arms, planting his feet into the ground as if to make himself physically immovable. “Do not attempt to mock or belittle me, Heruwulfaz. I ask this of you in all seriousness.”

    As luck would have it, the king did become serious, leaning forward from his throne with a distinctly un-amused look plastered on his face. “Listen, I know what you’re trying to do, Erilaz,” he whispered dangerously. “First off, even without the army I have more than enough political support to keep you down. You’re time on the stage is over. In any case, this conversation is pointless, because as a matter of fact I am not going to disband the army, I am going to keep it.”

    “This has nothing to do with politics!” Erialz hissed, and this time Heruwulfaz could tell that he was being serious. “This is a matter directly relevant to the well-being of our nation. This constant war-footing is draining all the wealth from our lands!”

    Heruwulfaz stared back incomprehensively. “I don’t-“

    “It’s the economy, stupid!” Erilaz roared, the exertion causing him to be momentarily consumed by a ferocious cough. Instead of waiting to recuperate, the old man pressed on through his bouts of wheezing. “What do you…think happens when…people aren’t home for the…harvest season!? No crops can get picked and then…there’s not enough food!”

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    The king waited patiently for Erilaz to finish, already regretting his earlier threat. “I’ll admit that the economy has suffered a little, with all this constant campaigning. However I have spoken at length with my advisers about this issue and I believe that, as the Confederacy adds new tribes, its internal trade will increase exponentially. I’m told that we’re already beginning to make back some of the wealth we lost last year. Once we begin to integrate larger territories like Skandza, trade should begin to flow again.”

    Erilaz grumbled and mumbled to himself, but offered no further protests. With childish petulance, the old man snatched his cane and returned to his feet, shuffling towards the exit as fast as his age would allow. Heruwulfaz smirked, taking a quiet pleasure in yet another victory. “Be safe on the roads,” he called after his rival, “travel can be quite taxing on a man of your age!”

    “I am going for a walk,” the king declared, leaving a small crowd of petitioners to groan in disappointment as he started towards the door. They would just have to wait; Heruwulfaz had spent all day cooped up on his throne and his limbs with aching with restlessness. A nice walk – or maybe even a quick ride – was the only thing that could get him through the rest of this day.

    Heruwulfaz had not taken more than five steps out the door before he abruptly collided with another pedestrian, tumbling backwards into the road with a painful thud. Dazed now, he stumbled back to his feet and readied a furious oath at the blurry culprit in his vision.
    “My sincerest apologies, your lordship,” the figure offered as it began to back away. “I should have paid more attention.”

    “Wait a minute,” Heruwulfaz began as his brain slowly processed the other’s voice, “Okaz, is that you?”
    Even as he asked this, the blur on his vision had already begun to fade, revealing the familiar countenance of his friend Okaz. It was no wonder that they had walked right into each other; the old warrior, although always looking somewhat fatigued, appeared to be especially exhausted today, sporting dark, baggy layers of skin beneath his eyes.

    “It seems I’ve been bumping into you everywhere!” Heruwulfaz remarked as he began his walk again. “Where are you off to?”

    “Making rounds,” Okaz replied unenthusiastically. “We’ve been told to go through the settlement and search all the houses for weapons.” The simple act of saying this made the man sigh with exhaustion. “There are a lot of houses.”

    “You don’t look so well, my friend,” the king commented with some concern. “It’s only been a couple of weeks, yet you look ten years older.”

    Okaz turned his head away defensively. “I have not slept in a while,” he replied, trying to make his insomnia sound trivial.

    “I know the feeling,” Heruwulfaz replied kindly. “I’ve been told that difficulty going to sleep is a sign of restlessness. You probably need to burn off some more energy during the day.”

    Okaz shook his head flatly. “I can get to sleep just fine, usually. It’s…my dreams that give me trouble,” he muttered, chiding himself for wasting the king’s time on his own, petty problems.

    “Your dreams?” Heruwulfaz replied curiously, “what about them? They are strange?”

    No, they’re…” Okaz trailed off, desperately searching for the right words. “It’s like they’re punishing me – mocking me.”

    He took the king’s silence as an invitation to continue. “The job of a warrior, at its simplest, is to defend his home and his people. Every battle I’ve ever fought – every man I’ve ever killed – I justified by saying that I was defending innocent people. I tried to convince myself of it – I guess I’m still trying…”

    “I spent over three years fighting to try and to stop the Rugoz,” he recounted bitterly, “and they always seemed to slip through our fingers. Scores of villages were torched to the ground, their inhabitants slaughtered like animals – I’d never felt so useless before in my life. You can’t imagine what it’s like until you’ve seen it. You have to be there, walking through the smoldering embers of some innocent person’s life, listening to their wailing just echo around in your mind.”

    The warrior grew visibly distressed, “I thought that conquering the Rugoz would make everything right again, but nothing changed – I can still see it all in my head while I sleep. It just added more nightmares to torment me; I can’t stop wondering who was innocent and who was guilty. So many of them were young – barely older than boys!”

    There was no stopping the flow of words anymore; they poured from Okaz’s mouth like a thunderous tide. “Then, in Kimbroz, I watched that village as it burned to the ground. It was hard to see with all the smoke, but some people must have been trapped inside their homes – I could hear them screaming. There I was, an experienced warrior with years of service under my belt, and I still couldn’t do anything to help people!”

    “I thought…I hoped that the battle here in Skandza would change things somehow. I thought that, by defeating somebody who I really knew was evil, I could just put it all to rest. As usual, I had no such luck. I just keep seeing all of these terrible things in my mind – they won’t ever leave me alone, I know that now. They are the curse that every warrior must bear – from the start of his career until the last mound of earth is placed over his grave.”

    Heruwulfaz tried to think of something suitably to say, but he would have had better luck trying to grab hold of the wind. After a few minutes of unfathomable silence, the king quickly resumed his walk again, burdensome thoughts floating around in his head.

    ***

    “Lord Hrabnaz,” the king commanded, his voice reverberating through the vaulted confines of his hall, “step forward.”

    Hrabnaz willingly complied, quickly hurrying up to the throne and placing himself prostrate on the ground. It was an act of supplication, but Hrabnaz added a certain confident theatric to the ritual that made him seem imposing in his own right. “I am right here, King Bidajaz. What is your will?”

    The king of the Habukoz smiled, relishing in watching his plan come together so seamlessly. He rose to his feet and motioned for Hrabnaz to do the same. “There is no need for you to lower yourself in my court, Hrabnaz. Unlike your kinsmen, I hold you and your abilities in high esteem.”

    Hrabnaz blushed slightly at the compliment. “You are too kind, lord. Your eye for character and talent is unmatched.”

    “I trust none of your brothers are aware of what has transpired between us?” the Habukoz king asked, his tone abruptly becoming grave and conspiratorial. “Not even the slightest hint of suspicion on their part?”

    Hrabnaz carefully pushed the man away, moving forward with an air of supreme confidence. “I thought you said you trusted in my abilities?” he teased. “Believe me; they are none the wiser – and they never will be.”

    Bidajaz seemed satisfied, clapping a paternalistic hand on Hrabnaz’s back. “You will be an excellent servant of Habukoz, Hrabnaz. For a man as talented as yourself, I believe your career will go far indeed; and who knows? Perhaps, given enough time and loyal service, the throne could even be yours.”

    A look like that of an excitable child crossed over Hrabnaz’s face. “Do you really mean that, my lord?”

    Bidajaz smiled; this impetuous young noble was far too easy to manipulate. “Time will tell – certainly stranger things have happened; and I am certainly not one to let blood ties come before ability.”

    “Then tell me what I must do,” Hrabnaz implored, “so that I may perform it quickly and flawlessly.”

    “Your brother’s victory against the Skandza puts me and the rest of the remaining free tribes in a difficult spot,” the Habukoz king sighed. “We do not have the military might to openly defeat the Sweboz, not even if we all banded together. Through the employment of subterfuge and cunning, however, we may stand a chance.”

    “I need you to return to your brother’s court,” Bidajaz explained, “and report to me anything and everything that he does. Troop movements, new appointments to office, war plans – if he as much as sneezes, I want to hear about it. If I can know his every move in advance, then I can easily undermine him – and if I can undermine him, my tribe…our tribe can persevere.”

    Hrabnaz digested his instructions with a single nod of the head. “It will be done, your lordship – you can count on me.”

    His orders given, King Bidajaz turned away and headed for bed. “I expect great things from you, Hrabnaz. I’m sure you won’t disappoint.”

    ***

    ”Two weeks after crossing the River Rin into the lands of the Walhoz, we began to pass through territory belonging to a peoples called the Arverni. The Arverni are among the most powerful and prominent of the Walhoz, commanding countless settlements and many worthy warriors, who are decorated in fine panoplies of metal. Yet none of their wonders could compare to that vast city they call Vesontio.”

    Amongst the tribes of the Northlands, it was exceedingly rare to see a single building made out of stone, let alone an entire defensive wall. Hagaradaz and his party were still some distance away, but even now they could get an acute sense of the city’s imposing power and grandeur. Like all cities of the Walhoz, it was perched at the very top of a steep hill, lording over the surrounding villages and farms as an unquestionable edifice of power. The villagers they had passed had only spoken of Vesontio in awestruck whispers; having seen it for himself, Hagaradaz at last understood their behavior.

    “There it is,” Berdic sighed, his eyes beginning to mist a little at the sight of the massive oppida. “Vesontio…it hasn’t changed the slightest bit.”

    “That’s right!” Hagaradaz blurted suddenly as they started their approach up the hill. “You said Vesontio was your home, didn’t you?”

    Berdic laughed and shook his head. “Not the city itself, no. My family lived on a farm a few miles out from here, but during the harvest season, I would usually help my father bring our crops to market here. It was always really exciting,” he added a little wistfully. “The plazas are huge, and my father would always give me a spare coin to spend when I came with him.”

    “Your kind use coinage then?” Hagaradaz asked, wisely bringing the conversation back towards their task. “I thought I heard that before, but I wasn’t sure.”

    “Gold and silver ones, mostly,” Berdic explained. “Sadly, we didn’t come up with the idea by ourselves; the Massalians – an odd group of peoples in the far south – spread the idea to us. It makes commerce easier, but it also introduced us to the fickle thing called ‘taxes’.”

    It was clear that they were not the only people heading into the city that day; the path up the hill was clogged with a veritable swarm of travelers, peddlers, and citizens. In such terrible congestion, to be on horseback was a wonderful thing; the crowd, eager to avoid being trampled, gladly parted way for the party of Sweboz. A few travelers cursed loudly at the disruption; Hagaradaz urged his horse forward, grateful that his knowledge of these peoples language was still perfunctory.

    The Sweboz knew what a city was, of course; their knowledge of the world was broad enough that they knew of the Walhoz and some of their customs. Even so, Hagardaz couldn’t possibly have been prepared for the sheer sensory overload that assaulted him upon passing through the gates of Vesontio. It was as if all orderly constraints of color and sound had been chaotically torn asunder; a hundred voices all seemed to shout at once as conversations struggled to make themselves distinct within the din. Brightly made tarps and ornamented carpets hung over long rows of cramped merchant stalls, which stretched in long rows at either edge of the street, funneling people onward even as they tried to draw them aside. Berdic, the more experienced of the two by far, took his master by the arm and began to lead him.

    “Keep your eyes forward,” he insisted, mumbling out of the corner of his mouth. “Try not to bump into anybody – and if you have to, at least try to avoid the ones with weapons. If somebody tries to sell you something, keep moving; don’t stop for anybody, even if they look hurt.” With great difficulty, he steered the pair towards the path to the governor’s office. “Make sure you keep an eye on your belongings too, because they can get stolen before you know it.”

    Breaking away from the mob was akin to escaping a howling tornado; it took all their willpower to escape, and once they were out the change was immediate and visceral. The dull roar of human speech seemed to fade into a quiet murmur; all of the dizzying sights passed mercifully out of view. Hagaradaz took a huge breath, greatly relieved to be back in his element. As they got to traveling again, only a handful of venerable-looking persons traveled along the road with them; whoever the governor was, he clearly wasn’t amenable to the common rabble.

    Like most of the buildings in Vesontio, the governor’s mansion was made of finely-polished stone, standing at the absolute summit of the hill in a very unambiguous expression of his authority. The guards at the front entrance appeared to be suitably well-equipped, sporting a fine kit of chainmail and padded helmets, and sharp-looking swords to boot.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    “Please step aside,” Hagaradaz requested with his meager mastery of the Walhoz language. “I am a diplomat of the Sweboz. I am here to talk.”

    The two soldiers seemed to get the message; one of them disappeared into the mansion, while the other held out his hand to suggest that they should wait. Nervously, Berdic leaned over and whispered in his master’s ear. “I recommend that you let me translate, from now on.”

    Hagaradaz suddenly looked petrified, “by the Gods, what did I say to them!?”

    “No, no, you did fine!” the slave assured, “but I’m worried you’ll say something offensive by accident.”

    The door creaked open once more, and the returning soldier beckoned for the two to follow him back inside. Quietly steeling himself, the diplomat nodded his thanks and stepped boldly through the threshold, Berdic following cautiously in his wake. Somewhere behind them, the door slowly groaned shut.

    The building’s stone construction lent itself to a dark and labyrinthine interior. In less than a minute spent inside, Hagaradaz had given up trying to memorize his way out. A minute later, he was utterly, hopelessly lost. He stuck to his Arverni guide with an almost desperate attachment, terrified of the ramifications if he managed to get left behind.

    In time, their nonsensical navigating led them to a wide open audience hall, where a single circular table had presumably been placed for them to sit at. No sooner had they entered than they were accosted by a burly, greybearded man, his clothes finely adorned in the sacred symbols of the Arverni nation.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    “In truth, I never thought this day would come,” he exclaimed, his tone hovering somewhere between good-humored and disdainful, “a man of the east who comes to our lands not to fight, but to parley! What has happened to your kind, easterner, that you now employ the virtue of restraint?”

    Hagaradaz began to reply, hoping that Berdic could catch his words as he went. “Many things, noble lord of the Arverni, but foremost among them is an awakening. For we, the miserable masses of the Northlands, having lived countless centuries in misery and squalor, have resolved to build for ourselves a future in which all may prosper, not merely the strongest.”

    The nobleman let out a barking laugh, but a measure of respect could be seen to glisten in his eye. “What is your name, easterner?”

    “I am Hagaradaz, of the tribe of the Samanoz. This,” he added with a sweep of the hand, “is my translator Berdic. Who are you, lord?”

    The Gaul puffed out his chest, “I am Aneirin, the governor of Vesonito – devout worshipper of the god Lugos, a peculiarity for which I have become quite well-known.”

    “Good health to you, Aneirin,” Hagaradaz returned genially. “Now, shall we get down to the business of this meeting?”

    “Indeed, and you can begin,” Aneirin rumbled, “by explaining the meaning of these eastern raids into our lands. We have a war to contend with as it is – your kind nipping at our heels only complicates matters further.”

    “I was actually just about to ask you,” Hagaradaz returned patiently, “what cause your warriors have to be making forays into the Northlands. Admittedly, your attacks rarely reach Sweboz territory, but my noble King endeavors to style himself as protector of all the tribes. Your raids on the Habukoz and Heruskoz make things difficult for us politically.”

    Aneirin clenched his fists dangerously. “We are in the middle of a war – you easterners have always been a nuisance at best. To keep our borders safe, it is only prudent that we endeavor to weaken our neighbors.”

    “There is a war going on in the Northlands every day,” Hagaradaz countered, “a war that is deeper and more pervasive than any other fought before, or any that ever will be fought. It is a war between two forces – two ideologies – that are incompatible with ne another. One of them – the one I fight for – advocates for a civilization peace and cooperation with its inhabitants and all of its neighbors. The other, the one we fight against, is an ideology of chronic warfare and violence, punctuated only by despair. I ask you, which civilization would you rather share a border with?”

    Aneirin chewed furiously on his moustache, his face turning redder by the second, but it was clear he had no retort. “We stop our raids across the river, and you will try and stop these two tribes from attack us?”
    “An agreeable arrangement for all, don’t you think? The cessation of hostilities is only the beginning. Once word spreads that the river crossings are safe again, trade between the Northlands and your peoples can resume again. The wealth of two nations will flow back and forth, enriching all at nobody’s detriment.”

    By now, the Gaul could not possible decline; his best bet was to try and save some face. “I suppose this is a fair arrangement. I will pass the word on to our King, who will surely approve it. But I warn you – and mark me well – any negations between your nation and those of the Aedui will be seen as a hostile act.”

    “Fair enough,” Hagaradaz shrugged. “I seem to recall hearing bad things about the Aedui anyway,” he added with a subconscious glance towards his slave.”

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    A comfortable pause passed as Berdic took a sip of water. “These are perhaps the fastest negotiations I can remember!” Aneirin laughed. “What will you do with the rest of your time?”

    “I think I will partake in your city’s hospitality for another day or two,” Hagaradaz mused as he slowly stretched himself out. “But before long, I am bound to travel onward. I have more nations to meet with, at my King’s command.”

    “A bit of advice then,” the nobleman offered, “you will want to head south-west first. There is a peninsula in that direction, where many nations find themselves coming intersecting together. Most of them are tribes, but I have heard stories of foreign men who also dwell in cities – ones even larger than this.”

    The thought of an even larger city stung Hagaradaz’s brain like a jolt of lightening; it was both an exciting and terrifying prospect. “I guess I know where I’m headed next.”

  2. #2

    Default Re: Sons of the Wolf and the Bear (Sweboz)

    Chapter X – New Ventures

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    “Hoist up the sail!” went the cry, and within moments the narrow vessel was abuzz with energy and activity, the strained grunts and pants of its sailors echoing ominously across the foggy expanse of the shoreline. Most of them were glad for the warmth their exertion brought on this chilly morning; it had already been several weeks since the first leaves had begun to brown. Still, they would not be warm for much longer – their planned route took them north, across the murky waters to the shores of mighty Skandza.

    The people of the Northlands prided themselves as being masters of many trades; all men were expected by society to be fierce warriors, in addition to being competent hunters, woodsmen, and farmers. A discipline typically lacking throughout their culture, however, was that of sailing and navigation. To a traditionalist, the sea was a fickle and unnatural thing; it took that which was right and predictable and flipped it on its head. On the open ocean, bravery and valor were worth next to nothing, and the average Northlanders would doubtless agree that any activity in which bravery was meaningless was, to be blunt, a meaningless activity.

    Yet money and wealth, as they say, can be powerful persuasion. King Heruwulfaz was, among other things, a visionary and a reformer. He clearly saw the massive potential for wealth that seaborne commerce presented, and he certainly wasn’t the type to let Erilaz and his ring of pig-headed reactionaries tell him otherwise. Just a few months after the conquest of Skandza, Heruwulfaz sent out orders for the construction of a Sweboz trading fleet, which would ferry traders back and forth across the sea free of charge. He further dictated that his laborers should erect trading ports on either end of the sea lane; the first such port facilities to ever be constructed in the Northlands.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    This embryonic seed of seaborne commerce required a skilled and effective man to oversee it, and the royal lord Ansuharjaz was wisely given the position. Under his guidance, a vital semblance of order had been brought to an otherwise hectic and confused operation. Regular travel schedules were established and publicized, the routes were meticulously mapped, and a strict code of discipline was imparted upon the sailors, who previously had suffered from an unfortunate propensity towards inebriation. It was not a job that Ansuhajraz would have asked for, or even one he liked, but as was his nature, he did his best possible job with it. His eldest brother was counting on him.

    “You gentlemen will want to wait a while before leaving,” the nobleman asserted, speaking to no one in particular as he strode up and down the wobbly length of the ship. “The last group that left during a fog somehow wound up on the eastern shore of Kimbroz – we had to pay a fortune to keep the merchants from slandering our services after that.”

    The ship’s captain scoffed and rolled his eyes as if any aspersions against his seamanship were unthinkable. “Don’t worry about a thing, your lordship – we’ll get everybody and everything there safely, I promise.” His enthusiastic confidence was akin to that of a brazen child.

    Ansuhajraz took a suitably paternal tone. “It’s not just about getting there safely,” he frowned, “it’s about getting there on time and in the right place. A lot of this stuff we’re shipping is perishable; that’s the whole point of having a shipping schedule.”

    The captain waved away Ansuharjaz’s concerns with a flick of his wrist. “Bah with all your schedules and all this planning. All I get paid to do is sail the damn boat back and forth – anything more complicated than that is your job, lord.”

    “And if you want to ever be paid for sailing your boat back and forth,” Ansuharjaz began testily, “you had best make sure you do it exactly as I say. I don’t have the patience for any mistakes – especially not from someone as overpaid as you.”

    The captain began picking spare bits of grime from his fingernails, rapidly losing interest in the argument he had started. “You make a big show with all your threats, my lord, but you’re not fooling anyone. If you get rid of me, who else are you going to find who knows how to sail?”

    “I’m told the fishermen in Skandza do good work,” Ansuharjaz tried, but his talent for bluffing was rather underdeveloped.

    “They might do,” the elderly sea dog retorted, still casually attending to his hygiene, “but I doubt you’re going to spend months hunting down some backwater group of inbred fishermen just because you think I’m a little to cheeky for my own good, right? You and I – there’s an understanding between us. I sail the boats, you pay me, and we both stay happy.”

    Ansuharjaz couldn’t believe the man’s disrespect for a nobleman – a brother of the Sweboz king, no less! Still, the cocky sailor was correct in essence – the time and effort involved in finding a new captain just wouldn’t be worth it. Perhaps in time Ansuhajraz would be given a window of opportunity, but for now he would just have to grin and bear it.

    “You just make sure everything is done right,” the nobleman returned, trying to save face through his remonstration, “and we won’t have any problems. Which reminds me of what I was saying before – I really think you should wait-“

    “Shh!” the captain interjected his confidence and carelessness evaporating away in a second. The man’s blanched, gnarled fingers grasped intensely at the rim of the hull as he leaned over the water, squinting ineffectively through the veil of mist hung before him. The rest of the crew hastened over to join him, not entirely sure what they were supposed to be worried about.

    “What, have you gone mad old man?” Ansuharjaz joked uneasily. “There’s nothing to see out there with all this fog hanging-“

    He never had a chance to finish his sentence before a pair of firm hands wrapped around his neck and dragged him to the ground, causing him to bang his head hard against the hull on his way down. At the same time, the rest of the crew all dropped hard to the floor as well, huddling themselves tightly together in a unanimous display of terror. Ansuharjaz opened his mouth to protest, but the same hands quickly returned to cover it again. Confused and irate, the nobleman ripped the offending extremity from his mouth and turned around, only to stare into the eyes of the sea captain, his wrinkled face drained with fear.

    “What on earth-“ Ansuharjaz began, but for the third time that day he was silenced as the captain pressed a bony finger to his lips. The nobleman complied, trusting in the other’s considerably significant experience even as he had only just finished questioning it.

    “I think I see some pirates,” the captain whisper, slithering over to Ansuharjaz as a worm might crawl through the mud. “They’ve been through this area in the past – probably looking for ripe targets.”

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    Inch by painful inch, Ansuharjaz peeked his head over the rim of the ship’s hull, his eyes darting comically from one side to the other in his head. Other sailors slowly followed suit, until a long line of timid eyes had assembled along the length of the vessel, all watching the glassy surface of the water for even the smallest sign of a disturbance. Somewhere down the coast, a loon was heard signing its mournful song; its voice was like a clap of thunder compared to the stillness of the sea.

    Just when the tension was becoming unbearable, they appeared; materializing through the fog like ghostly ships of the dead. A rational man would have immediately dove back into cover, but all those watching were too transfixed to even so much as blink. The ships casually began to pass by the mouth of the harbor, moving with the slow confidence of a predator sauntering through its hunting grounds. The raiders reached the other side of the port and turned around for a second pass, evidently fooled into believing the area was deserted. Either out of boldness or desperation, the pirates drew closer to the shoreline, standing on the tips of their toes as they looked for any sign of life or loot.

    Then, almost anti-climactically, the pirates departed, sailing back out to sea until they disappeared behind a heavy wall of mist. Both of Ansuharjaz’s lungs were burning; he hadn’t even realized he was holding his breath. A palpable sense of relief passed through the sailors as they slumped into satisfied heaps against the hull, most of them turning to drink to sooth their nerves.

    “You have a good eye,” Ansuharjaz admitted to the captain, feeling comfortable enough to speak again. “If not for you we could have all wound up dead.”

    “Perhaps you ought to remember that,” the other said wryly, “the next time you think about trying to replace him.”

    The nobleman grinned and patted the captain on the shoulder. “I surely will – but don’t think this gives you leave to slack off!”

    The seaman snickered, already turning back towards his work. “I would never dream of it, your lordship.”

    Ansuharjaz had quite enough of snark and seamanship for one day. He whistled for his horse and made for home, satisfied that the Sweboz shipping economy, young and inexperienced though it was, could endure the days to come.

    ***

    It was, as the saying goes, good to be home. After having spent many miserable months languishing in the frozen wasteland of Skandza, the long-awaited return to Swebotraustasamnoz was incredibly satisfying. No sooner had the gates of the palisade been sung open than a cowed of overjoyed citizens thronged his caravan, desperately reaching out their hands as if merely touching their king would be a divine experience. This type of unrestrained adulation was altogether disquieting for young Heruwulfaz, who much preferred to serve his subjects from behind the impenetrable walls of his royal hall.

    A good politician must be able to mingle as well as he manages, however, and in this regard the king could at the very least muster a competent and believable façade of sociability. Upon his triumphant return, he patiently played along with the demands of his adoring public; shaking hands, giving speeches, awarding commendations, and generally doing things he much rather not do. Heruwulfaz was indeed a patient and reasonable man, but he was certainly wasn’t a saint; when the Thing asked him to recount the Battle of Skandza for the fourth time in a row, he decided he had had quite enough.

    The sun had since passed behind the horizon, but from his place on the hill the king could still clearly hear the raucous shouting and laughing of the victory celebrations as they carried on into the night. Heruwulfaz found himself struck by an immense feeling of satisfaction; the kind he thought the Gods must have as they looked down upon their handiwork each day. When he was off on campaign or perched on his throne, it was easy to loose sight of the direct effect his actions were having on the lives of others. He would not soon forget how good it felt to watch his labors pay off at last; and this past couple of victories was only the beginning. Heruwulfaz was confident that the fortunes of the Sweboz, already soaring, could climb higher still.

    “I’m surprised to see you here brother,” a familiar voice chuckled from behind, “I would have thought you’d be out enjoying the festivities!”

    The crunchy sound of footsteps upon the fall grass announced the arrival of Hrabnaz, who wasted no time in sitting himself down beside his brother, an unusually good humor gracing his attractive face. From the amount of grunting and hissing it took for the young prince to seat himself, it was clear he had spent most of the day on horseback.

    Heruwulfaz quickly pulled his brother into a one-armed embrace. “Yeah well, you know me, Hrabnaz – never been much of one for parties. What about you, though?” he asked as he reached for more food. “Not quite feeling up for partying?”

    The question was something of a ruse; under the pale light of the moon, Heruwulfaz could clearly the smile plastered on his brother’s face. The other, perhaps sensing he was being too transparent, turned his head away. “I have had a long day,” he explained flatly. “A little rest is in order for me, I think.”

    “I thought you looked tired when you came over here,” the king remarked casually. “Been busy lately, have you?”

    Hrabnaz did his best to shrug away his brother’s inquiry. “More than usual, I suppose. I haven’t had any free time like this in a while.”

    The other nodded absently, quietly picking away at the last bits of flesh on his apple. “Believe me; I think we all know the feeling. Although I must say, it’s no surprise to me you’ve fallen behind on your affairs…I hear you’ve been doing a lot of traveling out west.”

    It was quite fortune for Hrabnaz that a cloud was passing overhead; else the whole world could have easily seen the color flow into his cheeks. “Well…just here and there, you know…checking out the borders and whatnot. Just trying to help out is all.”

    “Your wife has missed you greatly,” the king said matter-of-factly. “She was terribly upset that you were not there to greet your second daughter.”

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    Hrabnaz took the news of his daughter’s birth as casual as one might receive reports of the weather. “I am sure she will be a strong and healthy woman. The strength and health of our kingdom is not so certain, however.”

    “I can’t blame you for being concerned,” Heruwulfaz continued, oblivious to his brother’s guilt. “The situation on the western border is getting worse by the day. I was hoping the defeat of Skandza would make all the others capitulate, but instead it looks like they’re determined to go down swinging.” The king chuckled through a mouthful of food, “I’ll be happy to oblige them, of course, but our forces aren’t ready for battle yet. They need time to recover from the last campaign.”

    Hrabnaz’s body quietly switched to the alert; like a proverbial puppet master, the direction of the conversation was slowly evolving as he desired it. “Yes, our forces have certainly looked better. I’d almost think that, if the western tribes were to attack now, we could very well lose!” he added, subtly trying to extract information from the king’s enigmatic mind.

    “I’m not sure I would go that far,” Heruwulfaz countered pensively. “Granted our host ha somewhat exhausted itself, but they are still the largest and most experienced group of fighting men in the whole Northlands. If any of the western lords try to press the war into our turf, I suspect they will be dispatched in short order.”

    Typical, Hrabnaz thought, searing his brother with a look of bottomless contempt. Always so confident of his own brilliance – but not once does he ever do honor to those who loyally serve him! The prince cleared his throat, “I didn’t see any of our armies on my travels,” he observed innocently. “Where are they now?”

    “Moving south out of the woods,” Heruwulfaz sighed, clearly tiring of political talk. “Athawulfaz marches at the head of the column. It’ll take a week or two, but we should hopefully be able to find a clearer route to invade from. I just hope…”

    Hrabnaz hung onto his brother’s words with intense anticipation. “Go on, what is it?”

    The king reluctantly carried on. “When I last spoke to Athawulfaz, he seemed to imply that our army was the only thing preventing the western tribes from invading into Kimbroz territory. I suspect he was mistaken, but I’m worried the Heruskoz will find out about our maneuvers and launch an attack.”

    The prince grinned subtly to himself. They will do more than that, if I have anything to say about it. Having finished his work for the night, he rolled to his feet and made to leave. “It’s getting late, and Edjufrithko will want to know that I’m home. I will see you in the morning, Heruwulfaz.”

    “Goodnight, Hrabnaz,” the king called as the other started off. “It is good to have you back.”

  3. #3

    Default Re: Sons of the Wolf and the Bear (Sweboz)

    270 BC


    ”A moment comes, which comes but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new; when an age ends, and when the soul of a nation, long suppressed, finds utterance.”


    The lands of Germania have come a long way over the past two years; where there was once instability and chaos, a type of dependable order has begun to creep over the land in the form of the Sweboz Confederacy.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 



    Constant warfare and campaigning leave little room for any other pursuits, and barring the recent birth of Hrabnaz’s daughter Fritharikjo, no new issue have been produced from the royal family.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 



    The host of the Sweboz is vast and powerful, but is concentrated under a single banner. While Athawulfaz patrols the border well-equipped, the rest of the Confederacy’s territory remains vulnerable to any surprise attacks.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 



    By making peace with the Arverni nation, Hagaradaz has taken a great burden off of Heruwulfaz’s shoulders. Still, the terms of their treaty mean that relations between the Aedui and the Sweboz are likely to remain frigid into the foreseeable future.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 



    It has only been two years, but the ramifications of Heruwulfaz’s vision can already be acutely felt. Where it had once been dangerous to merely visit the next village over, a man can now ride from sunrise to sunset without having ever seen the boundaries of Sweboz, and he can be sure that every nation he passes through is a friend of his kin. No more fertile ground for growth and innovation has ever been laid.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 



    As the power of the Sweboz grows, their understanding of the world does as well. Through a combination of Hagaradaz’s travels, exponential trade growth, and territorial expansion, the people of the Northlands have gleaned a far more accurate perception of the world beyond the Northlands, particularly that of the city-dwelling Walhoz.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 

  4. #4

    Default Re: Sons of the Wolf and the Bear (Sweboz)

    Chapter XI – Misinformation

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    The shoddy merchant carts were poorly suited to the demands of the trail, haphazardly bouncing and crashing as they slowly wound their way through the ancient hills and forests. The caravan’s massive cargo – a gratuitous load of grain and fresh venison – did little to make the journey any easier. The nameless grunt assigned to harnessing the supplies clearly held his job in low regard; the fastenings were so few and so poorly done that even the tiniest bump would send loose rations rolling whimsically away into the pasty dirt.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    The convoy had traveled far today, and they had further to go if they were ever to reach their destination. In typical fashion, they had been given little information with regard to the purpose of their expedition, and little reason to believe they would ever find out. No concrete mention had been made of their destination either, but that was a mystery easily unraveled; even a novice woodsman would have known that their trail was carrying them onwards towards the western tribes, where the last remaining followers of the Old Ways were assembling the remains of their hosts in a final, quixotic display of defiance.

    No true man of Sweboz would dare to publicly question the judgment of their beloved king, but there were more than a few eyebrows raised at the decision to put his son Harjawulfaz in command of the operation. The young man was energetic, to be sure, but his princely wisdom and temperament were still painfully constrained by the boundaries of boyhood. Where Heruwulfaz approached statecraft with a gentle touch, Harjawualfaz had shown himself to be something of a lumbering giant, effectively battering his way through dilemmas by virtue of sheer stubbornness and tenacity. This indomitable spirit, combined with equal amounts of wisdom and ability, was the making of a great and worthy ruler; without it, it amounted to nothing more than the useless pugnacity of a tavern brawler.

    “I hate these stupid wagons,” the prince whined as their cart cleared an especially monstrous rut. “They bounce all the time and there’s nowhere comfortable for a man to sit. When I am finally made king, they shall be banned.”

    The horse driver, a man whose name was as forgettable and inconsiderable as his station, was having an increasingly difficult time of hiding his amusement. “I don’t know if that’d be such a good idea, your lordship,” the servant chuckled in his charmingly vernacular tongue. “The soothsayers can work many wonders, but I’ve yet to see the magic that can make a carriage fly – ‘cept in my dreams, of course.”

    “I never said anything about flying,” Harjawulfaz retorted irritably, wincing helplessly as they cleared yet another bump. “We ought to just take boats out of the water, and put wheels on them. Then it would be just like sailing, but over land instead of the sea.”

    The driver, not entirely certain if he was supposed to laugh or not, settled for a toothless smile. “I seem to recall they have those already,” he teased. “I believe they call them ‘wagons’.”

    “Never you mind!” the Prince spat, ill-humor hanging stubbornly about him like a somber cloud. “What business does a miserable layman have talking to me anyway? You’re just as dull and stubborn as my father, you are!”

    The servant grimaced slightly as he absorbed this latest salvo of curses from the prince. “Of all the words I have heard used to describe the king,” he began seriously, “I have never heard ‘dull’ and ‘stubborn’ among them. Perhaps we are not thinking of the same person…”

    Harjawulfaz met the driver’s patience with a rude snort. “My father is undoubtedly an accomplished man, but none of his accomplishments hold a candle to his mastery of hypocrisy. Consider how he lambasts his enemies and rivals as being blind and narrow-minded, and then steadfastly refuses to accept any ideas other than his own. Or regard his scathing condemnation of warfare between the tribes – even as the soldiers and armies of Sweboz march to do battle in every corner of the Northlands.”

    “King Heruwulfaz has a great and lofty vision for this nation,” the servant insisted calmly. “If the sacred values of law and fraternity are ever to be realized, it is perhaps necessary to temporarily forsake them in the name of pragmatism, no?”

    The prince was plainly unmoved by the other’s vague rhetoric. “Tyranny begins with pragmatism,” he cautioned darkly, “and ends with the iron chains of slavery. Ideals are not petty trinkets to be created and discharged at will; you must always stand by them if you expect to be able to speak for them. The precedent my father will set in the years to come shall be the defining standard against which all our leaders will be measured until the end of time. He should be mindful of the example he is leaving for posterity.”

    “You speak with the authority of a man who has never had authority,” the driver scolded. “It is well enough for you to criticize the weaknesses of the king now, but I must wonder if you will so easily rebuff the temptations of power when you sit upon the throne.”

    Uncomfortable tension still edged the afternoon air, but when Harjawulfaz spoke his words were delivered with a certain flat resignation. “Only time will tell us that; and until then I think I will keep to my reflections, however speculative they may be.”

    “Then allow me to speculate for a moment as well,” the driver continued. “No one has been very forthcoming with information about our destination, and the depot foreman seemed confused when I told him we were headed out west. What exactly are we doing, if your lordship wouldn’t mind saying?”

    Harjawulfaz carefully held his words for a moment, biting his lip as if he were not certain he could trust this lowborn servant at his side. Eventually, he coaxed himself into explaining their assignment. “The time is fast approaching for my uncle Athawulfaz to strike at the western tribes, and put an end to their scheming. If he is to carry out a campaign, he will need ample stores of food; father had heard that the army was running low, and so here we are.” A skilled eye might have noticed the driver’s brow furrow at this assessment, but the man held his tongue. What little remained of their journey passed by quickly, and in comfortable silence.

    There was a certain exaggerated majesty to the caravan as it flew into the open clearing, wheels thundering and hooves pounding rhythmically against the already flattened grass. Sunlight fell lazily down from the sky above; oozing a thin, glistening layer of orange gloss over everything it could touch. One-by-one the mighty ‘ships of the land’ rumbled to a stop, their drivers dismounting with all the grumbling and cursing that befits long hours of uninterrupted riding.

    “Wait…this is wrong,” Harjawulfaz asserted, his brain at last beginning to process the empty plain in front of them. He jumped down from the wagon and began to pace erratically, shaking his head in a mixture of disbelief and frustration. “This all wrong,” he repeated, “there’s nobody here!”

    “This grass is bent,” the servant observed as he knelt low to the ground, and “and you can see the remains of campfires lying around. They were definitely here at one time or another – probably just went on the march again is all.”

    The prince shook his head with rising agitation. “No – that’s not right. They should still be camped right here – they weren’t supposed to move out again for another month!”

    The other could only offer an apathetic shrug. “All I can tell is that they were here before, and they’re not here now. Maybe somebody gave you the wrong instructions.”

    Harjawulfaz confidently waved away his servant’s supposition. “This assignment was handed down from the very heart of the Confederacy; my uncle Hrabnaz explicitly assured me the army would be here. If he does not know what he is doing, then who does?”

    The driver released a quiet sigh; working with a man as stubborn and independent as young Harjawulfaz was something of a mixed blessing – if that. “Dwelling on errors of communication is a fruitless endeavor, my lord. The fact of the matter is that they are not here, and we don’t know where they are. So…with this in mind, what do you want to do?”

    This sort of unrefined mental coaching seemed to have a positive effect; the prince slowly began to let himself relax and reassemble his scattered wits. “We ought to wait here for a few days,” he proclaimed, oblivious to the general groan that erupted in response. “If my intuition is correct, uncle Athawulfaz and the troops will return here in good time.”

    The workers slowly shuffled away, readying their tools and equipment with all the enthusiasm of condemned criminals. Harjawulfaz seemed to notice none of it, waltzing through the emerging campground as if the prospect of a wretched week spent in the lonely woods were some sort of coveted.

    “Not even sixteen years old,” the driver seethed to one of his fellows, “and already making decision on intuition! I tell you, prince or not, that man is nothing more than an imbecile!”

    “Time and trial make for a fine polish – even on the roughest stones,” the worker said without interest, letting his words hang pointedly in the air. “Now help me prop this tent up – the sky looks ominous.”

    ***

    Wherever the Sweboz marched, victory seemed to follow, faithfully marching at their side through one triumphant conquest after another. There was an enormous amount of credit to be given, and no shortage of honorable heroes to give it to; perhaps to lord Athawulfaz, for his bold and fearless deeds in battle, or perhaps to the beloved King Heruwulfaz, for the unity and purpose he managed to bring to the disparate nations of the Confederacy. Then there were the pious within society, who would doubtless heap the honor and prestige upon the omnipotent gods who watched over them all.

    “You lads are the real heroes, I say,” Athawulfaz remarked to Okaz, choosing – in typical style – to march alongside his men rather than ride mounted. “The common folk love to chatter and gossip to themselves about their leaders and chieftains, but I’d wager that being good at fighting is a lot more valuable than being good at dissembling.”

    Okaz returned a polite laugh. “You do yourself a disservice, my lord. A strong and worthy leader is just as important as having strong and worthy warriors. Ask yourself, ‘what is a fine sword worth without a man to wield it’?”

    The nobleman snorted amicably. “You spout platitudes like a practiced greybeard, Okaz – perhaps you have a career in politics waiting for you once you retire. You may surely have my place, if you like.”

    “I should think not,” Okaz grinned. “If politics was as simple as inventing proverbs we wouldn’t have any need for kings in the first place! Besides, your royal brother needs strong men like you on his council – for advice.”

    Athawulfaz let out another snort, a little harsher this time. “My advice is of dubious value at best; both Heruwulfaz and I know it. I am a warrior; blood and death are my sustenance. Politics and diplomacy are like a meaningless buzzing in my ear – I go wherever I am bid, and I kill all who stand in my way. It is who I am.”

    “At least you are good at it,” Okaz quipped. “There are many men who can do nothing but brag and boast – do you still remember the chief Harkilaz, and how hastily he deserted his loyal soldiers?”

    “How could I forget?” Athawulfaz smirked. “I suspect I have never fought a more unworthy adversary – and his host was nothing impressive either. I didn’t even enjoy vanquishing him; there was no fight to speak of. It was just a chore.”

    The conversation naturally trailed off, replaced by the reliable beating of tired footsteps against the trail. With enough time spent as a warrior, Okaz had become fully accustomed to the tedium and hardship that came with marching. While most of the young men whined and grumbled under their breaths, the old soldier glid across the dust with easy strides. Still, the man was careful to conserve his energy; although the path seemed easy now, they had a long afternoon ahead of them, and the black clouds rumbling overhead seemed to suggest that it would be a very wet journey.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    “This maneuver seems improvised,” Okaz observed as they began to descend into a rather densely forested valley. “I thought we were well-positioned before – why the sudden decision to move out?”

    “Not my call,” Athawulfaz shrugged. “My brother originally said he wanted us to head south, where there’s less woodland, but then Hrabnaz showed up the other day telling us he had spoken with Heruwulfaz and we were supposed to head north instead. Doesn’t sound like a great idea to me, but it’s not my job to question my orders.”

    Okaz wrinkled his nose suspiciously, “it seems odd that his Majesty would send lord Hrabnaz out of his way to do something a simple messenger could have done just as easily.”

    “It also seems odd that a noble prince and an unknown killer should speak as friends,” Athawulfaz teased, “but then again I suppose the machinations of fate are always difficult to interpret – now more than ever, it seems.” The nobleman looked skyward, regarding the swirling mass of black and grey with dull foreboding. “Such a chill in the air…there will be rain tonight.”

    “Let it come down!”

    A peculiar series of events suddenly began to unfold, cascading one after the other in rapid succession. First there was a sort of general roar, rising from either side of the woods like a frothy wave crashing against a rock shore. A strange crunching sound followed shortly thereafter; the sound of twigs and leaves being mangled beneath anxious feet. Finally, in a moment of pure cinema the storm released a mighty jolt of the brightest lightening, illuminating – for but a fleeting instant – a terrifying mob of assailants charging the Sweboz from either side, furious screams reverberating in their throats.

    “Ambush!” Athawulfaz cried, feeling the unfamiliar jolt of panic sweep through his bowels. As soon as the lightening disappeared a hellish nightmare of darkness and chaos emerged in its place, with the Sweboz sprinting every which way for want of weapons and leadership.

    “My sword!” the prince cried as he fumbled aimlessly through the blackness, “where is my sword!?” He turned to seek aide from Okaz, but the warrior had already slipped away, lost amidst the tumultuous melee unfolding in every direction.

    Quick, panting breaths began to emanate from somewhere behind him; almost instinctively, Athawulfaz spun around and planted a massive first in his assailant’s face. A sick feeling of pleasure tingled in him as he felt the other’s nose bend and splinter beneath the impact. The noblemen bent down over his victim with the anxiety of a grave robber, running his hands blindly over the comatose soldier as he searched for some sort of weapon. “Come on, come on,” he pleaded, but his search was fruitless.

    Rain was coming down in a flood now, and Athawulfaz only just noticed the second enemy in time to dodge his thrust. The attacker began to make a patient advance, cautiously jiggle his spear in a bizarre attempt at feinting. In terms of skill and experience, however, the warrior was in way over his head; the nobleman easily dodged the second strike and yanked the spear from his enemy’s grasp, drilling the point into his adversary’s back as he tried to flee.

    Finally having armed himself, Athawulfaz clenched his teeth and leaped into the fray, fighting with all the fury and bloodlust he was famous for. Against this human whirlwind of carnage, no man could hope to provide resistance. Friend and foe alike hastened to dive out of the giant’s path, mewling and squealing like young peasant girls.

    At some point during the brawl, the royal brother lost his spear; he automatically reverted to fisticuffs, violently bashing and clubbing any who were foolish enough to think his martial prowess any the lesser. “Come on curs!” he bellowed as he effortlessly snapped the neck of a young juguntiz. “Better to die now then have me hunt you down later!”

    “You lordship,” Okaz suddenly cried, breaking into the nobleman’s gory trance, “we need to get out of here, now!”

    Athawulfaz slowly turned around, his face marked with casual confusion. “What are you talking about?” he asked of the warrior, “they’re scattering like ants!”

    You are killing many,” Okaz pressed, “but everybody else is getting slaughter. Everybody’s trying to escape south again – we should join them.”

    Athawulfaz scoffed and wiped blood from his mouth, half-heartedly following after his friend. “What’s the rush – I’m doing just fine!”

    “You are not!” Okaz insisted as they broke into a sprint. “You were killing plenty, but you were also taking blows left and right – didn’t you notice!?”

    A single glance to his person suddenly awoke Athawulfaz to reality; he hadn’t even felt the terrible rainbow of gashes and cuts that seemed to have spread across his body like a web. All of them looked painfully to the naked eye, and there were a few choice ones among them that made the nobleman wonder how he was still on his feet. “I guess I couldn’t feel…these look really bad,” he observed in a shrill voice he barely recognized.

    “You’re going to be alright,” Okaz promised as the sounds of combat and slaughter fell to a soft murmur. “We’ll just catch up with the survivors and then…”

    Okaz was still talking, but his words were little more than gibberish as Athawulfaz toppled hard to the muddy ground.

  5. #5

    Default Re: Sons of the Wolf and the Bear (Sweboz)

    Chapter XII – A Storm Gathers

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    Any fool with a tongue and half a mind for imagination can talk of heroism, but to rise up into the pages of history requires more than simple words or deeds. Rather, true heroes – the kind whose worthy names are forever immortalized in the minds of men – are born out of the highest virtue of them all: selflessness. To kill a score of warriors, or swim a raging river, is impressive to be sure; but to able to put aside all thoughts of oneself, and give without question to the welfare of others, is an ideal that most can only ever aspire to.

    Okaz never stopped to question what he was doing, even as his back began to buckle and strain beneath the weight of the catatonic giant slung over his shoulders. The warrior couldn’t claim to be well-versed in the healing arts, but he had seen enough wounds in his time to know that Athawulfaz was in bad shape. Every now and again he could still hear the prince moaning in agony, his cries providing an eerie companion to the torrential storm that had begun to fall. Though he was running as fast as he could, Okaz could still hear the deafening sound of the melee close behind him; a tiny voice in his head begged him to drop Athawulfaz and take off on his own. Ashamed at himself, the warrior shook his head and redoubled his pace.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 


    A grotesque sucking sound indicated that the prince was trying to speak; Okaz did his best to push away the pounding of the rain. “I can…hardly breathe,” Athawulfaz complained weakly. “Who…” he began, but is voice wavered and disappeared beneath a clap of thunder.

    “Hush your lordship!” Okaz begged with poorly concealed fear. “You must save your strength, please!”

    The other squirmed and writhed blindly in his position, nearly causing Okaz’s knees to break beneath him. “What about…the battle,” Athawulfaz tried again, more insistently. “Who…who won?”

    We did,” Okaz lied, praying his answer would silence the nobleman. “It was glorious. We routed them from the field in just minutes; everyone fought bravely…especially you.”

    Athawulfaz chuckled – or at least, the warrior guessed it was a chuckle. “I should have known…thank you, Okaz,” he added with a rattling sigh. “If I must go, at least I may leave in victory…”

    It was a response that gave little reason for optimism; Okaz found himself speeding again as panic and adrenaline coursed through his body in equal measure. The manly sounds of battle had since faded away; only the rapid beat of the rains was left to mark their flight. Fickle and treacherous even in the best of weather, the country road on which they ran devolved into a veritable swamp, mud and refuse pulling stubbornly at Okaz’s feet with every step. Visibility became next to impossible; the tired warrior only knew that he was headed north, and that to slow down for even a minute would almost certainly spell disaster.

    “We have been running for a long time,” Okaz panted, as if speaking to his lord would somehow keep him alive. “We must surely be getting close now.”

    Athawulfaz was racked anew by coughing, his lungs sounding grotesquely thick and congested. “Listen,” he whispered, “tell my brother…tell him that we won…and that the way to the west is open.”

    The warrior shook his head emphatically, feeling foreign emotions well-up deep inside of him. “No, you will tell him! Any celebration would fall flat without your lordship to grace it.” He squinted slightly, impatiently ignoring the sting of raindrops in his eyes. “You must be there to see his Majesty’s dream become a reality; to watch as our one-time enemies throw down their spears and take up our hands in friendship instead. It is as much your accomplishment as anyone else’s.”

    “You talk…too much Okaz,” the prince chided, his pain now making him ornery. “Your head is…fat with dreams and…devoid of reason,” he squirmed uncomfortably. “Set me down…so that I may rest.”

    “No,” the warrior insisted; disobeying, for the first time in his life, a direct order from his betters. “We need to keep moving. You are hurt, and there is further to go.”

    “What’s the point?” Athawulfaz retorted angrily. “I’m no fool…I know how bad…my injuries are. I may as well…opt for a peaceful death…if death in battle is to be stolen from me.”

    “No death is better than any death at all, wouldn’t you say?” Okaz secured the nobleman on his back and began to slow, every fiber of his body burning from exertion. “Come on,” he gasped. “We’ll stop at this farmhouse up here.”

    If travel on the road had seemed difficult, it was nothing compared to the muddy cesspool that Okaz now found himself attempting to wade through. Clumps of mud – or at least, what looked like mud – rose up as high as his shins or even higher; it was a wonder that a farm had ever managed to survive there at all, in retrospect. Somewhere not far away, a single light pierced the swirling expanse of the fog – a beacon guiding the pair onwards toward sanctuary.

    “There are people inside,” Okaz promised, hoping with all his heart that it was true. “They’ll be able to help us, I’m sure of it.”

    No response came from the man on his back; anxious, the warrior shook himself as if to wake his baggage. “Your Lordship?” He repeated the motion, more aggressively. “Athawulfaz!?”

    Still not a sound emerged. Cold panic gripped Okaz as his stimuli failed to generate a response; he found himself sprinting the rest of the way to the tiny farmhouse, all manner of terrible scenarios racing uncontrollably through his head. “Open up!” he demanded hysterically, his fist rattling the crude wooden door. “In the name of his Majesty, open the door!”

    The door opened, swinging noiselessly inward to reveal a thin, scrawny peasant man standing defensively in front of his young son. A single dagger sat clutched in his trembling hand, its construction as crude and simple as the meager furnishings which adorned his home. “Who are you,” he demanded curtly, “to speak with the authority of the king?”

    Okaz did not deign to provide a response; the farmer continued to bare his dagger as the warrior muscled his way through the door. The peasant drew back in alarm, and was about to raise a cry when his guest dumped the catatonic Athawulfaz onto the dining table, sending bowls and plates clattering to the floor.

    “By the Gods,” the man breathed, his face becoming awash in unmitigated shock, “no…is that?”

    “This is Athawulfaz,” Okaz announced darkly, “son of Swartigaizaz and brother of the great King Heruwulfaz – may his reign be long. Just an hour ago, this noble prince was badly injured in a fight with our enemies. I fear he will not survive.”

    The farmer touched a clammy hand to his forehead. “Oh my…Baldaz!” he said to the boy, his voice hoarse and constricted. “Run and wake Oma – be quick!”

    The child scurried further into the house, leaving the two men alone to their anxiety. “More inauspicious tidings there surely cannot be,” the peasant brooded to himself.

    “Baldaz…” Okaz repeated curiously. “Is he the one who beat Brecca in a swimming race?”

    “No, that was Beo,” the farmer dismissed, his eyes fixed morbidly on Athawulfaz’s heaving figure. “His wounds are very grave…how on earth did it come to this?”

    Okaz sighed, powerless to stop the faint smile which crept across his face. “His Lordship is an exceedingly brave and energetic fighter; it usually does him a service, but today there were simply too many.”

    The peasant tentatively approached the table, looking at the nobleman’s lacerated torso in a sort of horrified wonderment. “These wounds could have easily felled a bear, let alone a man; does he not feel pain?”

    The warrior proffered a humorless laugh. “If he does, he certainly doesn’t show it. In the heat of battle, I have seen him become more animal than human; his fury and bloodlust are unequaled. I suspect he would have sooner been hewn in half than lay down his arms.”

    The farmer shot his guest a cautious sidelong glance. “Am I correct to presume that you carried him to my home?”

    “Indeed – and I have the bruises to prove it,” Okaz quipped dryly.

    The other returned a polite laugh. “What is your name, warrior?”

    “They call me Okaz – and you?”

    “I am Hludaz,” the other explained. “You have already met Baldaz, of course.”

    Okaz was about to responded when a tapping was heard, beating rhythmically somewhere within the house. Perplexed, the warrior was about to question his host when an elderly woman made her way into the room, hobbling along with the aide of a roughly made cane. Every aspect of her reminded one of a hag; her face was wrinkled and leathery from many decades of exposure, and even her limbs seemed to be gnarled and twisted out of shape. “What’s the rush for?”

    “Mother,” Hludaz greeted, rushing over to help the woman walk. “We need your help. This man here,” he explained with a wave, “is the brother of the king. He is badly wounded and needs medicine.”

    The old woman pushed her son away and approached the prince, examining his body with an utterly impassive countenance. A shaking pair of hands began to fell at the various cuts and gashes, appraising them for unknown qualities. “He is very badly hurt,” the woman assessed, “but if I set to work right away, I may be able to save his life.”

    No sooner had this stunning pronouncement been made then the healer set to work, reaching for her various pots and jars without as much as a single word. Okaz watched with cautious excitement as she began to carefully mash ingredients together, shoving bitter spoonfuls of the medicine past Athawulfaz’s motionless lips.

    The prince’s survival was still far from assured; but if nothing else, Okaz could be sure that he had at least been given a chance. All of the exertion and stress of the previous hours seemed to suddenly catch up to him; his whole body felt heavy as he flopped down into a nearby chair.

    “You seem very tired,” Hludaz observed kindly. “Would you perhaps prefer a bed? I would be happy to open my home to you, after all you have done.”

    “I am fine, thank you,” Okaz assured. “I would prefer to remain at his Lordship’s side until we are certain he will be okay.”

    “I understand – and I will certainly be glad to have a warrior keeping guard for us!” Hludaz laughed, the tension of the previous deathwatch slowly disappearing.

    “Ha,” Okaz laughed humorlessly, “you will need more than just one warrior if things are as I fear them.”

    “What do you mean?” the other asked perplexedly.

    “Only one man not in the army knew we were marching south today,” Okaz said with a simmering anger that surprised even him. “And that man is the same who gave us the orders in the first place.”

    Hludaz gasped, “surely not King Heruwulfaz?”

    “No – his brother: the honorable Lord Hrabnaz,”

    ***

    “You have lied to me!”

    King Bidajaz conducted his reaction with masterful theatrics, reeling backwards in his throne as his whole face was consumed an expression of shock and indignation. “Good Hrabnaz,” he chuckled incredulously, “I didn’t expect you back for another day, at the earliest! What on earth are you shouting about?”

    Hrabnaz dashed the king’s good-humor with a single swipe of his hand, the pair of royal guards backpedaling cautiously out of the potential line of fire. “Do not play me for a fool!” the prince roared, leveling a trembling finger at his patron. All in the room were as still and silent as statues but for Hrabnaz, who continued to shake and heave in the center of the hall as if he might explode.

    “I surely won’t,” Bidajaz said kindly, “but first I think you need to help me understand what has you so upset – else how can I hope to be of any help to you?” As an actor he was unmatched; his every word and mannerism, down to the slightest idle motion of his hands, was performed effortlessly and immaculately.

    “The seneschal just brought me the report,” Hrabnaz explained, struggling to keep his voice level. “According to him, the main Sweboz army was just ambushed on its march southward.”

    Bidajaz erupted into a chorus of triumphant laughter, his fist banging excitedly on the arm of his seat. “And it was a success too, so I’ve been told! After all our planning and skulking we have finally scored a tangible victory against our foes!”

    “My brother was among that host!” Hrabnaz bellowed, utterly sickened by the king’s joy. “Who knows what happened to him?! What if he was hurt!?”

    “It would be quite the shame if he was only hurt,” the king chuckled, prompting a small crowd of advisors to hurriedly do the same. “If he lives we may have to devise some way of finishing him off.”

    No words were necessary; the horrified stare plastered on Hrabnaz’s face was an entire speech unto itself. What little mirth had emerged from the cluster of retainers quickly fell flat again, leaving silence to reclaim the hall. Bidajaz sighed as might a laborer put to a task, pushing himself reluctantly from the comfort of his throne. “Come boy,” he asked rather than demanded. “Walk with me for a minute – it’s a beautiful night.”

    The other hesitated for a long moment, squinting suspiciously in response to this altogether unexpected invitation. His right hand hovered somewhere near the hilt of his dagger, betraying the ongoing conflict in his mind. A single clap echoed off the walls as he took a tepid step forward. “You had best explain everything,” he asserted as he took another step, “and if you lie then Gods have mercy on you, because I surely won’t.”

    Bidajaz almost laughed, but he quickly thought better of it; even the slightest display of flippancy might have turned the young prince against him. Through Hrabnaz’s cooperation he had been handed the tools he needed to keep the independence of his people and orchestrate the downfall of the Sweboz; he would gladly to anything not to lose it.

    It was a warm and windy night that the two men ventured out into, the purple sky above laced by a brilliant web of stars. Word had been passed around about a storm gathering somewhere in the east, but for now the weather was as pristine as could be. It was a strange time indeed for treasonous talk.

    “We haven’t had weather this nice in ages,” Bidajaz commented pleasantly. “I was growing more than a little sick of the cold, let me tell you.”

    “Hold your dissembling,” Hrabnaz growled. “We have more important things to talk about than the seasons.”

    The king let out another sigh, no longer willing to beat about the subject at hand. “Yes, yes, I know. You’re worried about prince Athawulfaz, correct?”

    “He is my brother,” Hrabnaz insisted. “The same blood that runs through him is in me also. You must have known that he was in the army as it was marching – why did you go ahead with the task.”

    “I made a crucial decision,” Bidajaz replied testily, “one that will go a long way to protecting the Heruskoz. There is no doubt that it was the right thing to do.”

    “But…” Hrabnaz stammered, “he could be dead! I’ve known him my entire life – better than anyone else, and-“

    “So what? Hrabnaz, listen,” the king insisted, grabbing his pupil paternally by the shoulders. “You have already renounced your allegiance to the lands of Sweboz; Athawulfaz and the others – they are not your kin anymore. You may think to show them clemency, but what would happen, do you think, if they ever found out about all that you have done?”

    A fleeting image of a sword flashed through the prince’s mind, the blade gleaming as it swooshed down upon the neck of a traitor. “I understand,” he said solemnly, “but this is not a case of mere treason, your Majesty. What we are talking about is fratricide – nothing less!”

    “You told me that your brothers were always inequitable to you,” Bidajaz reasoned patiently. “That they stole your honor, robbed you of your glory, and consigned you to the most menial and wretched tasks they could possibly think of. Did you not spend half a year patrolling treacherous swamplands in the far south?” he asked theatrically. “That sounds as much like an attempt to kill you as anything else.”

    “They may have tried to hold me back,” the prince relented, “but they were surely just misguided. It can be all too easy for lesser men to fall into the cursed vice of jealousy.”

    The king managed to suppress a snicker. “Hrabnaz, if you are ever to be a king then you must now begin to think like one. Put aside the emotions that have made you weak and suggestible; discard all your foolish sentimentality and overactive empathy! Your brothers are no kin of yours; they have spent their entire lives keeping you weak and making themselves strong! Your lot is now permanently cast against them – the ancient laws will show you no mercy if you treachery is ever revealed. When you see them, do not see the faces of your brother but see them for what they really are: enemies and obstacles to be overcome and destroyed! When you treat with them do not do so with love and compassion, but with hate – for hate can be the most powerful of allies, when wisely and justly used.”

    “To take up arms against my own family,” Hrabnaz whimpered, “what man would ever deign to look me in the eye again!?”

    “What man would dare not to!?” Bidajaz cried, his eyes seeming to literally burn with passion in the darkness; the prince could only recoil helplessly. “All kings are beloved in triumph – your name shall be like legend, its echo ever carrying down the vaulted corridor of the histories. Wherever you shall ride your lesser will flock to you, straining and breaking themselves if only to look upon you. All those who thought they would be great – Heruwulfaz, Ansuharjaz, and Athawulfaz – shall be cast evermore from human memory, all of their achievements being raised to your name instead. From riverbank to rolling riverbank your domain shall stretch, encompassing all the worthy people of the world and leaving the rest to wallow in agony for want of your supreme grace.”

    “But…what if it never comes to pass?” Hrabnaz moaned, his willpower draining from him with each passing second. “What if all of my – all of our efforts fail?”

    “It is too late to worry about that,” the king asserted. “If you fail to fight, then time itself shall work against you – your treachery shall become bare and you will be hunted for a lowborn dog. If you pursue this dream then you may still fail, true, but the alternative is greatness everlasting. I think the choice is clear.”

    Hrabnaz refused to commit to anything, but fate had already been set into motion. “If I were to…to fight…what should I do?”

    “Ride to the house of your brothers,” Bidajaz said softly. “Do what you know you must.”

    Later, with all others asleep and with only the Gods themselves to bear witness, Hrabnaz rode for the lands of Sweboz.

  6. #6

    Default Re: Sons of the Wolf and the Bear (Sweboz)

    I like this AAR very much... I love the new intrigue.... Will Hrabnaz be fighting his brothers? btw are you RPing this only or are you doing this ingame as well, if so I'm curious how
    The path is nameless - Lao Tse

  7. #7

    Default Re: Sons of the Wolf and the Bear (Sweboz)

    Quote Originally Posted by Reality=Chaos
    I like this AAR very much... I love the new intrigue.... Will Hrabnaz be fighting his brothers? btw are you RPing this only or are you doing this ingame as well, if so I'm curious how
    Hrabnaz certainly seems determined to be rid of them, at any rate. Most of what I'm writing is stuff I'm RPing based on events in the game. For example, Athawulfaz got the "scarred" trait while marching towards the Heruskoz, so I decided to write the ambush scene. A lot of stuff is just embellishment for plot purposes, but it's all based on real events, I assure you.

    ***


    Chapter XIII – Family Reunion

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    Certainly Okaz was no stranger to malicious and disagreeable dreams, but his night spent in the house of the lay farmer Hludaz was marked by a sleep more restless and fitful than any other he had endured before. His mind seemed to be torn between the world of men and the world of dreams; he ceased to know for sure whether he was conscious or unconscious, watching helplessly as the low-burnt candles cast their elongated shadows up and down the walls. Everything he saw was fleeting, indistinct, and never fully comprehensible; he saw brief scenes of the elderly healer leaning over the prince, applying strange ointments and potions to his wounds. A split-second later and the room seemed to melt and swirl, finally emerging empty save for the catatonic Athawlufaz. With time and fatigue, Okaz ceased to see anything at all, his whole body slouching exhaustedly into his lap.

    It had been a very long time since the warrior had been woken by the call of a rooster, but there was no mistaking that shrill and entirely unwelcome call as it reverberated through the house. No sooner had he been jarred from his meager allotment of rest then Okaz found himself tumbling ungracefully from the chair, flailing as he sprawled pathetically across the stale floor rushes. Either through the sound of his collapse or the continued exhortations of the rooster, the others in the house were roused to their feet as well, shuffling into the main room with the usual morning grumbling and eye-rubbing.

    “You know,” Hludaz yawned as he stepped over his prostate guest, “if I had known you wanted to sleep on the floor, I could have given you the dog’s spot, near the fire.”

    Okaz rolled onto his back and sighed, still searching for the motivation required to get up. “Spare me,” he mumbled through errant strands of hay, “it’s far too early for wit. I can’t have gotten more than five minutes of sleep.”

    “Well I’m sure you fared better than the Prince did,” the farmer replied with a nod towards his table. “I kept hearing him moan throughout the entire night – probably all that medicine he was given.”

    The haze over Okaz’s mind seemed to clear in an instant; grimy rushes went slipping into the air as the warrior bounded back over to the table. In his fatigue and complacency, he had all but forgotten about his Lordship’s struggle against death. His hands reached out uncertainly, as if he thought it would somehow be disrespectful to even touch a nobleman.

    “Your fear is misplaced,” Hludaz promised as he followed his guest over to the dining table. “It is a good thing that he has been crying out in pain – it means he can feel it and respond to it.” The farmer turned away and proceeded towards his cabinet. “Do you remember when you first brought him here, how he wasn’t making any noise at all?”

    An uncomfortable string of memories began to tumble through Okaz’s mind; for a brief moment he could feel the cold sting of the rain on his back, and the painful pounding of his heart as the prince ceased to respond to his questions. Back in the real world, he gave the slightest shudder. “I do indeed.”

    “That was a bad sign,” explained Hludaz, now returning with a fresh slab of dough. “It meant that his body was shutting down – he wasn’t reacting to things anymore. Now he’s getting better, so he can feel things better – or worse, depending on how you see it.”

    Okaz let out a humorless laugh, still keeping his eyes tightly trained on the body in front of him. “Hopefully he will be well enough to move again soon. I do not want to stay in one place for too long – and the remnants of the army will be looking for him.”

    The peasant began beating the dough carelessly against the table. “I hope you’ll stay for breakfast, at least. Never sorry to have more company, and we always have plenty of food to go around.”

    “I suspect I have no choice in the matter,” Okaz replied with a wave towards Athawulfaz. “I can’t go anywhere until he’s at least awake – the laws command it.”

    Hlduaz put down the dough and withdrew from it, wiping a few early beads of sweat from his brow. The look on his face was one Okaz had seen many times over; the look of an entirely spent man, wondering how he was ever going to make it through the rest of the day. “Then I don’t suppose I could trouble you for a quick favor?” Hludaz said hopefully. “It’ll only take five minutes, I promise.”

    Lingering traces of sleep were still harassing Okaz, tugging at his joints and making them sluggish; there was little he could have preferred less than to be sent on an errand. Still, after everything this farmer and his family had done, custom dictated that the warrior do his part to repay him. “With what do you need help?”

    “I need somebody to run and fetch me some water, to cook with,” the peasant explained as he continued to rest. “I’d have Baldaz do it, but he’s not strong enough to carry the whole pail; and my mother is busy looking after the prince.”

    There was a momentary pause as Okaz processed this report, mentally counting the number of people the farmer had cited. “And…there’s nobody else around to help you?” he asked rather consciously.

    If Hludaz at all understood what his guest had insinuated he certainly didn’t show it; there was only the tiniest twinkle of emotion in his eye as he shook his head. “No – nobody else. That’s why I need to use the extra pair of hands while I still have it!”

    For a few moments the warrior’s head was filled with a whole array of potential excuses he could have made; about sickness, infirmity, or even royal station. Just as quickly he had shouted down his immature reluctance; a little activity and movement in the morning was good for the humors anyway.

    “I will return shortly,” Okaz pronounced with a sigh. For a moment he lingered awkwardly beside the table. “Is…is there a bucket somewhere?”

    A solitary finger stretched out towards the doorway. “Right over there, by the entrance. Just go ahead and take it right off the hook; if you follow the dirt path down the hill you’ll reach the well in no time.”

    Okaz plucked the wooden pail of the peg with little delay, the first rumblings of hunger beginning to stir in his stomach. It came to him that he must never have eaten supper last night, and he seemed to recall having something of a small lunch as well – a poor choice, but then again, so was marching on a full stomach. This modest breakfast would be the first time he didn’t plan his meal around the demands of soldiery; for that alone it was worthy of being enshrined as a feast.

    Hludaz had perhaps not been entirely truthful with his directions – Okaz was finding it to be a little more than a mere short walk. The hill he was walking down was steep if, not sheer, and it seemed to gradually transform into a repetitive series of tiny mounds and depressions, the monotony broken only by the chance stream or boulder. Although a little dull, it was hardly an unpleasant walk at least; after last night’s terrible storm the new day’s sky had been left a vivid, healthy shade of blue, with the forest songbirds and insects having apparently returned in full, if their renewed chorus was any indicator.

    The water-well was as dull and predictable as one might have expected, although perhaps looking slightly run-down. Like any well, it was little more than a ditch encircled by a pile of stones, although in this case there was a distinct sensation that either the construction or the maintenance portion of the assembly had been performed with underwhelming attention-to-detail. A notable film of moss and debris lay thinly spread across the greenish surface of the water; very hoping that Hludaz would be boiling this liquid, Okaz ran his pail through the puddle and started back.

    For the first time in many weeks, the warrior found his thoughts drifting away from the mundane and the practical and towards the lofty domain of the philosophical; a topic of which, like most people, he knew little about but had no shortage of things to say. He found himself marveling at the meager world-wealth of these peasant farmers – rationing dough and drawing their water from stagnant pits in the ground. That which he had always found grueling and arduous – sleeping in tents on the march and eating military rations – seemed petty now that he held it in perspective to the poverty of the rural folk. Since the earliest dawn of man, the Northlanders had always been quick to trumpet the importance of freedom – but what was freedom worth if you were not also equal?

    This train of thought would continue no farther; Okaz found his reflections interrupt by a rumbling, so faint as to be indistinct, emanating from somewhere nearby. By this point, his instincts acted without him even realizing it; he was only vaguely aware of his pace slowing to a crawl, his eyes readily scanning the field for anything at all out of place. His mind began to run through its vast catalogue of survival strategies and combat stances – all of this, he realized, without having been given even the slightest real evidence of a threat. It suddenly struck him how long he had gone without being truly relaxed.

    Then, just when he thought it had been a false alarm, he saw them: a small party of horse-bound soldiers, their banner whipping violently through the air as they flew down the road. Armed warriors on the road were not terribly uncommon, but something about this particular war-band made immediately made them seem sinister; perhaps it was the furious speed at which they rode, or the unknown symbol which was sewn into their standard. Their conduct was entirely brisk and businesslike, implying no small amount of formal training; they dismounted in impressive synchrony, moving towards the farmhouse in an ominous, semicircular mob.

    There was a loud knock on the door, a quick and tense exchange of words, and then they were gone, somberly filing one-by-one through the doorway. From his distant spot on the crest of the hill, it was impossible for Okaz to tell what had been said or what had transpired. The presence of armed soldiers this far west could mean but one of two things; either the Sweboz army had recovered already, or the armed agents of the Heruskoz were now patrolling the area for its remnants. Only the latter seemed at all likely.

    Okaz crept silently along the wall of the house, his back pressed as flatly as possible against the uneven crags of the woodwork. In his right hand he still tightly clutched the water pail, splashing his trousers with loose discharges of water as he tried to hold it steady. It was somewhat foolish, he realized, to go through all the trouble of holding onto this tiny bucket, but he didn’t dare drop it – the slightest sound could have ended his impromptu spying in a moment.

    Muffled voices were coming from beyond the wall; Okaz positioned himself beneath the open window and rose up to a crouch, placing his ear just beneath the sill. The conversation seemed to be reaching its crux.

    “-still don’t see why you gentlemen stopped here. This is Sweboz territory; the laws of the Heruskoz don’t apply here.”

    There was no immediate response save for a series of heavy, mail-clad footsteps. “We must have just been mistaken…this is the royal prince here, on the table?”

    Okaz’s back was killing him now; the disks of his spine groaned ominously in his awkward pose. The warrior took a trembling hand and tried to ease his pain.

    “I never said anything about a prince…”

    “Don’t be so dense,” one of the soldiers snapped peevishly. “This is the royal heraldry of Sweboz here, on his tunic. I would recognize it anywhere.”

    Hludaz was heard to pause uncomfortably. “I…I don’t know who he is.”

    “You lie,” was all that the warrior cared to muster. “Irwaz, ready your sword and-“

    A sharp jolt of panic hit Okaz as the bucket slipped from his grasp, scraping shrilly against the wall as it tumbled downward. As if this were not bad enough, the comedic charade continued as the pail bounced again and again down the hard dirt road, its hollow banging making a commotion to rival that of a full-equipped army. Finally, just when Okaz’s embarrassment had become all but unbearable, the circus ended; the bucket ceased to bounce and simply rolled the rest of the way down the path.

    The party of warriors reacted in just seconds; as soon as the clatter of the water-pail had died away their angry cursing had risen to fill the void. Deciding that stealth had become irrelevant, Okaz removed himself from the wall and turned to run, burn the tired creaking of the doorway froze him in place. He watched reluctantly as the war-band came around the side of the house, their hands dangling over the hilts of their blades.

    “Who is this?” demanded the leader, a fiery-faced gentleman with scowling wrinkles etched deep into his skin. “Some sort of thief?”

    Hludaz, looking helpless and clueless in equal measure, followed his guests to the scene of the disturbance. “Oh – this is Okaz,” he explained blankly, “a warrior of the Sweboz – and a fine one, at that. It is he who brought me the body of the prince.”

    No further words were ever passed between the soldiers, but when they finally moved, they moved as one, drawing their swords and bringing them to bear with finely-practiced precision. Okaz found himself flying into a retreat as a he backpedaled down the hill, his un-guarded arms raised in front of his face in a futile gesture of defiance.

    One of the warriors at the head of the pack made a massive lunge; Okaz pulled his torso back at the last minute, but not quite fast enough; a brief sting coursed through his arm as the blade sliced into it. Genuinely afraid now, Okaz lowered both his arms and prepared for a final stand, watching with smoldering contempt as his enemies began a leisurely attempt to encircle him. A muttered prayer escaped the warrior’s lips as he curled up a punch.

    “No more Sweboz die this day!”

    All heads turned just in time to see a dizzying blur slash through the air; a weak moan went out as one of the assailants toppled to the ground, his limbs flopping like wet seaweed onto the dirt. In another second, all had found themselves recoiling in fear at the giant who had no joined them in their diversion.

    “Okaz, you devil!” Athawulfaz laughed, hefting the carpenter’s hammer effortlessly in his right hand. “Thought you’d leave me out of this one, eh? Fat chance!”

    “Your Lordship!?” the warrior cried, quite forgetting about the battle he was supposed to have. “I thought you were unconscious!”

    “I’m awake,” the nobleman returned, “and I’m thinking it’s time for a little…morning calisthenics.”

    Almost to a man the enemies ran for their lives; only their apparent leader, the dour-faced one, still stood his ground, his already venomous visage growing more furious by the second. As if something had been decided, his hand shot down reflexively to the hilt of his sword. “Then fight me, cur!”

    His death was hardly worthy of the virile scream he had given; a dense crushing sound accompanied by the implosion of his skull, leaving his head to bounce and sag repulsively in the road where it fell; the captain’s sword, finely made and richly ornamented, cart-wheeled whimsically through the air before impaling itself into the grass.

    Athawulfaz casually drew the blade with his left hand, turning it over beneath the fresh light of the sun. He seemed to really be studying it, as if there were something in particular he was looking for. Then, without any warning, all questions were answered; Athawulfaz hefted the sword high into the air and, with an unearthly roar, pelted it into the field.

    “We have been betrayed,” was all he could say.

    “Hrabnaz told the Heruskoz of our location,” Okaz was quick to add, grateful that his suspicions were being corroborated. “That’s the only way they could have known we were going north instead of south.”

    The lord pumped the air furiously with his fist, grinding his teeth so tightly they seemed as if they might shatter. “Those men were Hrabnaz’s personal guard – his loyal thanes, sworn to do his bidding. He sent them here to finish me off!”

    “There’s no telling how long he has been an agent of the Heruskoz,” the warrior cursed pensively. “Their foul king will have had access to even the most closely guarded secrets.”

    Athawulfaz turned around haughtily, moving at an almost unmatchable pace. “Not for long he won’t.”

    “Wait!” Okaz called after him, jogging to match his steps with those of his hulking comrade. “We should ride to the capitol,” the warrior agreed, “We should bring this knowledge to the king,”

    “Aye,” the prince seethed as he swung atop a vacant horse. “And we will need to hurry if we are to get their in time. Saddle up,” he commanded with a sigh, “we ride for the east.”

    ***

    “Once again you return!” Heruwulfaz laughed as he descended the courtyard stairs. “I swear you have traveled more in these past few weeks than ever before in your life!”

    Hrabnaz coldly brushed away his brother felicitations, giving him a dark look that was at once solemn and exhausted. “Indeed brother; and I will continue to travel until I have done all that I must do.” He threw a hand irritably into the air; his servants took the message and made to quarter his horse.

    “Your sarcasm ill-suits you,” Heruwulfaz responded chidingly. “It seems to have put you in a terrible humor lately.”

    “There is no time for humor,” returned Hrabnaz, his voice seemingly trapped in the same, tired monotone. “With each passing day the ranks of our friends dwindle and those of our enemies grow more numerous. It is a crime for you to live as carelessly as you do.”

    The king gave his brother a look of deep and genuine concern, laying his arm gingerly around the other’s shoulder. “You are not well, brother. Come on, let’s get you inside. Ansuharjaz has probably started eating already, the pig.”

    For the first time that evening, Hrabnaz laughed, but it was like no laugh Heruwulfaz had ever heard. The usual mirth and warmth was replaced by an unattractive mix of malice and bitterness; it hit the ears like a mad-dog’s bark. “We may as well just throw him in the pot next time – slice some garlic in and you’d probably never taste the difference!”

    “With enough garlic you won’t taste anything!” joked the king, carefully ignoring his brother’s bizarre and sadistic vein of conversation. “Now come on, I’m starving – and I’m sure you are too!”

    For a moment the young prince seemed as if he meant to remain in the cold; his head turned slowly back towards the direction he had come from, his eyes boring an invisible hole into the surface of the road. He seemed almost enraptured, or maybe even lucid – his every tiny filament and particle seemed to freeze perfectly in its place. Only his hair was moved, whipping and fluttering under the influence of the nighttime winds.

    Then the trance was gone as he turned back towards the awaiting feast; only the glossy stare in his eyes left to suggest anything was wrong.

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